well basically nothing, the animal dies, it bleeds out the oxygen and blood. Then the animal goes into complete shock and the calms and dies. The animal is paralysed.
No, paraffin wax is not absorbed into the skin. It creates a barrier on the skin's surface, helping to retain moisture and promote hydration. When the wax is removed, any moisture that the skin has absorbed during treatment is also removed.
What happens to a solid when energy is removed
Kerosine (Kerosene or Paraffin as it is more commonly known) can not be removed completely from stew, it's best throw the meal away.
Most of the paraffin candle wax can be physically scraped off with any kind of scraping tool - even an ordinary butter knife if nothing better is at hand. The remaining residue, if it concerns you, can be removed with turpentine, which dissolves the paraffin.
youngmula
Used to test for residue on the skin that can result from discharging a firearm, the suspect's skin is coated with warm paraffin, which is applied to the skin to open up its pores. This collects contaminants from the skin. If the suspect had fired a gun, one potential contaminant would be the nitrates from gun powder residue. Once the paraffin hardens and is removed, either diphenylamine or diphenylbenzidine is introduced to the paraffin cast, which will turn it blue in the presence of nitrates. Thus, the presence of blue dots on the paraffin casts is evidence that the suspect had fired a gun. Other sources of nitrates can produce a false positive result.
Oh, dude, separating paraffin from water is like trying to separate a cat from a comfy spot on the couch - not gonna happen easily. You can technically do it by heating the mixture to melt the paraffin and then letting it cool to solidify, creating two layers you can separate. But like, who has time for that? Just buy a new candle, man.
Prioktan918
there is no more grass
i want my answer
urine
it will destroy